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From the Senate Journal, here's how the Senate voted on Senate Bill 5 Wednesday evening after being amended by the House:

The question being,"Shall the Senate concur in the House amendments to Am. Sub. S. B. No. 5?"The yeas and nays were taken and resulted - yeas 17, nays 16, as follows:Those who voted in the affirmative were: SenatorsBacon Beagle Cates DanielsFaber Gillmor Hite JonesJordan LaRose Lehner ObhofSchaffer Stewart Wagoner WidenerNiehaus-17.Those who voted in the negative were: SenatorsBrown Cafaro Grendell HughesKearney Manning Oelslager PattonSawyer Schiavoni Seitz SkindellSmith Tavares Turner Wilson-16.So the Senate concurred in the amendments of the House ofRepresentatives.Pursuant to Senate Rule No. 65, Senator Skindell demanded a verificationof the vote.The President directed the Clerk to read, first the names of those senatorswho voted in the affirmative, then of those who voted in the negative.The Clerk preceded to read the names of those senators who voted in theaffirmative, then of those who voted in the negative.The roll call was verified and the results declared.

After the Ohio House approved Senate Bill 5, opponents in the audience shouted repeatedly as House members attempted to conduct routine business. House Speaker William Batchelder, R-Medina, became angry, swore at one point as a House member asked for a point of privilege to honor a friend, and then made a reference to the departing protestors as "intellectuals."

The vote occurs at 220 minutes into this state government television archived video of the House. At that point the shouting begins and Batchelder summons the Ohio State Patrol to clear the hall.Batchelder's exasperation with the audience occurs at about 224 minutes.

Sandusky took a look at the efficiency of it's fire department, including a study by the International City/County Management Association. Here is the Sandusky Register's report. Be sure to check out the association's report linked at the end of the story.

The Cleveland Plain Dealer dug into the history books and found that the so-called "Local government funds," which will be cut by about half in Gov. John Kasich's budget, date back to the Great Depression.